Bill Passes to Remove Hereditary Peers from House of Lords

Bill Passes to Remove Hereditary Peers from House of Lords
1 min readPoliticsLegal

A bill abolishing the 92 seats for hereditary peers in the House of Lords has passed.

  • A bill has passed to abolish the 92 seats reserved for hereditary peers in the House of Lords.
  • Hereditary peers hold seats due to inherited family titles.
  • The change affects only the seats reserved for hereditary peers, not other types of Lords.

The House of Lords will no longer reserve 92 seats for peers who inherit their titles, following the passage of a new bill.

This change alters the composition of the House of Lords by removing seats tied to hereditary privilege, potentially impacting the chamber's structure and representation. Based on a single source report

Attention may turn to how the House of Lords will fill or redistribute these seats and any further reforms that may be proposed.